| 11. | Only the accusative case for indefinite masculine nouns is often marked.
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| 12. | Commonly encountered cases include nominative, accusative, dative, and genitive.
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| 13. | For morphosyntactic alignment, many Australian languages have nominative accusative case marking.
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| 14. | In contrast, regular nouns do not have a distinct accusative case.
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| 15. | Historically, the similarity of the accusative and genitive endings is coincidental.
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| 16. | A number of languages have both ergative and accusative morphology.
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| 17. | Those orders are permitted in Sakha if accusative case is overtly expressed:
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| 18. | Pronouns also inflect for nominative, accusative, referent and locative cases.
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| 19. | Personal pronouns have Unmarked, Nominative, Accusative and Possessive case forms.
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| 20. | In noun morphology, there are two cases : nominative and accusative.
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